Film Review
With their first sound horror films
Dracula and
Frankenstein
proving to be major box office hits in 1931, Universal Pictures wasted
no time following these up with similar Gothic-style monster movies,
securing a healthy income stream at a time when all of the Hollywood
studios were fighting for their lives.
The
Mummy came along in 1932, followed by
The Invisible Man one year
later. The next gruesome ghoul in this illustrious line-up was
the wolf man, although, unlike Universal's previous nasties, his first
screen outing was not at all well-received.
Werewolf of London is little
more than a thinly veiled reworking of R.L. Stevenson's story
The Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde.
This would not have been a problem were it not for the fact that
Paramount had, just a few years previously, made a prestige screen
adaptation of Stevenson's novella, with Fredric March unleashing his
inner beast to great effect. Critics and audiences were quick to
write-off Universal's werewolf film as just an inferior version of
Paramount's
Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde, and the
film was inevitably a flop.
Despite this failure, Universal still saw some mileage in the werewolf
idea and brought him back in their 1941 film
The
Wolf Man, with Lon Chaney Jr. suffering from an acute case
of lycanthrope, aided and abetted by Claude Rains. This film was
a hit and was followed by several popular sequels, including some
improbable link-ups with other Universal monster stalwarts and comedy
duo Abbott and Costello.
Judged on its own merits, and with a sufficient quantity of strong
liquor in your bloodstream,
Werewolf
of London is not a bad monster romp. Whilst it may lack
the stylistic brilliance of Universal's previous Gothic horror films,
the story is well-structured and well-paced, the werewolf is
convincingly realised (another achievement for Universal's makeup
maestro Jack Pierce) and the sets and camerawork convey a mood of
menace and inescapable doom. The film is not a classic but it
still has much to commend it.
On the downside, Henry Hull makes an unsympathetic hero, showing little
of the heart-wrenching pathos that would mark Chaney's portrayal in
The Wolf Man. Also,
some of the comic excursions (such as the sequences with the drunken
old crones, who look disturbingly like a Monty Python tribute act) appear out of
place and weaken the drama at a crucial point in the narrative
(i.e. just when things start to get scary).
Stuart Walker's directorial contribution is workmanlike but not
particularly inspired, although this is partly compensated by Charles
J. Stumar's atmospheric cinematography. The respectable
principal cast includes Warner Oland, the Swedish
character actor who was well-known to cinema audiences at the time for
his portrayal of Charlie Chan in a long series of films made by Twentieth
Century Fox in the 1930s.
Completely overshadowed by Universal's subsequent Wolf Man films,
Werewolf of London has been
consistently overlooked, even by aficionados of the horror
genre. No one in his right mind would ever rank this alongside
Universal's great Gothic horror classics, yet the film has a quirky
off-the-wall charm that easily makes up for its lack of genuine horror thrills.
© James Travers 2010
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.
Film Synopsis
The renowned English botanist Wilfred Glendon travels to Tibet in
search of a rare plant, the mariphasa lupina lumina, which is reputed
to blossom only in moonlight. In the course of his expedition,
Glendon is attacked and bitten by a werewolf. Having survived the
attack, the botanist discovers the elusive plant and returns to
England. Whilst his wife Lisa is hosting a party at their London
home, Glendon receives an unwelcome visit from a strange Oriental, Dr
Yogami, who insists on seeing the mariphasa specimen. Yogami
reveals that the plant is the only antidote to lycanthrophobia, an
illness that causes men to transmute into werewolves whenever there is
a full moon. Glendon politely refuses to accede to his visitor's
request and resumes his attempts to stimulate the plant with artificial
moonlight. In the course of the experiment, Glendon begins to
change into a werewolf. He manages to halt and reverse the
transformation with a flower from his mariphasa plant. The next
time, he is less fortunate. As he becomes a werewolf for
the second time, Glendon notices that the remaining flowers have
disappeared, stolen by Yogami. Without the antidote, the
botanist cannot prevent himself from turning into a savage homicidal
half-man, half-wolf creature. His one thought is to kill,
and so he goes out into the streets of London, intent on finding his
first victim...
© James Travers
The above content is owned by filmsdefrance.com and must not be copied.